PEDIATRICS Vol. 60 No. 2 August 1977, pp. 251-253
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Legal change for child health: Report on a conference

Henry M. Seidel M.D.1

1 The Johns Hopkins University, School of Health Services, Hampton House 105, 624 North Broadway, Baltimore, Maryland 21205

"Physically and politically powerless, children have always gotten the short end of the stick. In earlier times, the surplus, especially females, were legally and deliberately killed; in the Middle Ages and until recently children were chattels; in Dickensian England they starved in workhouses or were exploited as beggars a la Oliver Twist...."

Louise Raggio, Conference Participant

The building Frank Lloyd Wright called Wingspread served as the setting for a discussion concerning the relationship of the health of the young to their legal needs and the role of the pediatrician in these regards. Men and women from medicine, the law, and social work shared their points of view, seeking a firm definition of advocacy for children, attempting to highlight some manageable priorities among the legal needs so that pediatricians might move to a partnership with others in the community which might facilitate access to a better life for all children and youth.